Specialised work wear
manufacturing company, the
Kit Group, is set to open a
design centre at its downtown
Johannesburg premises as
part of a strategy to revitalise
the textile industry in South
Africa.
“I believe there is potential
to return to the old glory days
of the textile industry in South
Africa, before Chinese imports
saturated the market,” said
CEO Andrew Robinson.
According to Robinson,
the textile industry employed
over 130 000 people – more
than the mining industry
– in the 2 000s. “It is now
down to around 35 000, with
several textile factories closed
down,” he said. “When China
gained access to the South
African market, even with the
applicable 45% import duties,
its textile offerings were still
cheaper.”
The Kit Group is now on an
aggressive acquisition path –
looking at acquiring several
companies over the next four
years – to consolidate the
sector and focus on building
skills.
“There is a massive skills
gap and a lack of technical
expertise in the sector which
we lost when the bottom
fell out of the industry,” said
Robinson. The strong formal
education sector around
clothing design, textile design
etc had also dwindled since the
sector’s heydays, he added.
The Kit Group’s design
centre will focus on building
skills within the broader
textile manufacturing space
– from high-end design to
production.
“There are several major
global companies entering
the African marketplace,
especially from the United
States and the United
Kingdom, and these
companies need uniforms
for their staff,” commented
Robinson.
These companies, which
have commissioned the Kit
Group to manufacture their
uniforms, include the US’s
Puma Energy group, which is
opening up fuel stations across
the continent, as well as the
UK’s G4S security company
which continues to make
inroads in Africa.
“It makes sense to build a
strong manufacturing base
in South Africa to meet these
demands and then distribute
further into Africa from here,”
said Robinson.
The design centre will
also be focused on new and
innovative technologies
in textiles, which can be
incorporated into uniform
design and manufacture.
“Many of our clients
need specialised fabrics
appropriate to the
industry they serve –
bullet-proof vests for
security companies,
bacteria-resistant fabric
for hospital staff etc –
which we are currently
importing. If we could
develop these technologies
here, we’d have an even
bigger competitive advantage
in the textile industry,”
Robinson commented.
He said another opportunity
in the textile space was the
growing need for bespoke
work wear for corporate
clients. Studies had shown
that corporate staff who had
to wear a uniform were far
happier at work, and more
productive, if their prescribed
clothing met both their style
and their comfort needs, he
added.
The Kit Group is working
with several clothing designers
to create corporate work wear
and is currently running
several programmes and
campaigns to attract designers
from across the African
continent to collaborate on
creative design projects.
Robinson said the next step
– part of the group’s long-term
plan – would be to revive the
textile mills in South Africa.
“There are currently only a
handful of mills in the country
and we still source the majority
of our textiles from China.”
INSERT & CAPTION
The next step — part
of a long-term plan
— will be to revive
the textile mills.
– Andrew Robinson
Manufacturer sets its sights on revitalising textile industry
01 Apr 2016 - by Adele Mackenzie
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